Stub area – H3C Technologies H3C S7500E Series Switches User Manual

Page 74

Advertising
background image

4-5

Figure 4-2 Virtual link application 1

Another application of virtual link is to provide redundant links. If the backbone area cannot maintain

internal connectivity due to a physical link failure, configuring a virtual link can guarantee logical

connectivity in the backbone area, as shown below.

Figure 4-3 Virtual link application 2

The virtual link between the two ABRs acts as a point-to-point connection. Therefore, you can

configure interface parameters such as hello interval on the virtual link as they are configured on

physical interfaces.

The two ABRs on the virtual link unicast OSPF packets to each other directly, and the OSPF routers in

between simply convey these OSPF packets as normal IP packets.

Stub area

The ABR in a stub area does not distribute Type-5 LSAs into the area, so the routing table size and

amount of routing information in this area are reduced significantly.

You can configure the stub area as a totally stub area, where the ABR advertises neither the

destinations to other areas nor external routes.

Stub area configuration is optional, and not every area is eligible to be a stub area. In general, a stub

area resides on the border of the AS.

The ABR in a stub area generates a default route into the area.

Note the following when configuring a (totally) stub area:

z

The backbone area cannot be a (totally) stub area.

z

To configure an area as a stub area, the stub command must be configured on routers in the

area.

z

To configure an area as a totally stub area, the stub command must be configured on routers in

the area, and the ABR of the area must be configured with the stub [ no-summary ] command.

z

A (totally) stub area cannot have an ASBR because AS external routes cannot be distributed into

the stub area.

Advertising